Saturday, 29 July 2017

Football in England has two best sides by some distance, Liverpool FC and Manchester Utd. For RL it's St Helens and Wigan. Saints are near Liverpool and Wigan Manchester so the comparison is notable. In each analogy, going from 1961 to 2016, the closeness is remarkable.

The Championship or league is the top 4 teams, scored 6-3-2-1. Then the Premiership or finals again top 4 sides, 6-4-2-2. Challenge Cup finalists, 4-2. League Cup 4-2, Lancashire & Yorkshire Cups, BBC Floodlit Trophy finalists, 3-1. The only cup left is the C C.

St Helens just leads thanks to the Premiership finals success. Wigan did best in the League Cup, Leeds the Yorkshire Cup was its specialty. It falls away after that to Bradford, a club that won't be adding points to this list anytime in the future. Some of the names here will also struggle to add much now that the county cups are no longer contested. (2017 premiership finals added 08/10/17).

Club / Comp

Tot

Prem

Lge

C C

Le C

La C

Y C

BBC

1

St Helens

428

167

133

81

6

30

-

11

2

Wigan

427

124

136

102

34

27

-

4

3

Leeds

341

125

104

66

14

-

29

3

4

Bradford

175

60

64

24

12

-

15

5

Widnes

168

44

34

42

22

21

-

5

6

Warrington

160

48

41

33

22

15

-

1

7

Hull FC

132

35

33

39

8

-

14

3

8

Castleford

121

32

24

24

8

-

21

12

9

Hull KR

112

34

32

18

8

-

19

1

10

Wakefield

77

31

11

18

2

-

15

11

Featherstone

51

7

16

21

-

7

12

Halifax

46

17

10

9

6

-

4

13

Salford

40

10

14

3

2

8

-

3

14

Huddersfield

35

12

13

9

-

1

15

Leigh

31

2

7

6

8

-

8

16

Swinton

30

4

17

8

-

1

17

Dewsbury

11

6

-

1

4

17

Catalan

11

5

3

3

-

-

19

Sheffield

10

3

6

-

1

20

London

9

2

4

3

-

-

21

Barrow

8

3

2

3

-

22

Hunslet

7

3

-

4

23

Workington

6

6

-

24

Rochdale

5

2

2

-

1

25

Oldham

4

4

-

26

Bramley

3

-

3

27

Blackpool

2

2

-

28

York

1

-

1

Grand Total

2451

768

696

513

150

132

132

60

A small addition is the World Club Challenge that six sides have won, some more than once. I allocated 4 points for each victory.

Friday, 28 July 2017

There were some notable changes for the seventh World Cup. It was the first to operate under the six tackle rule and all games featured neutral referees. It was not played at a tournament location but played home and away over eight months. How radical is that? It was also the first World Cup with more than four teams as England (not Great Britain) played for the first time, with Wales now included as a separate nation.

For all of that, it really was an interesting series of matches. None of the competitors were totally outgunned and the new side Wales surprised with its performances. The Welsh were also notable for its involvement in some of the more violent incidents during the WC. All the nations involved hosted games.

March 1975: France kicked it off with a win over Wales in Toulouse (7,600 in attendance) 14-7. France then went to Leeds in the UK to face England. The hosts prevailed 20-2 (before 10,800).June 1975: Australia welcomes New Zealand to Brisbane (12,000) for their first game which I remember watching on television. Australia easily won 36-8. England and Wales then played a game in Brisbane (only 6,000 attended) and Wales surprisingly won 12-7. Australia then defeated Wales In Sydney (25,000) 30-13, then England shared the spoils with NZ 17-17 in Auckland (12,000). Australia overcame France 28-6 in Brisbane (9,000) and six days later took on England in Sydney (34,000) for a 10-10 draw. The last game of the month was held in Auckland (9,000) where NZ just defeated Wales 13-8.

At this point all had played four times. Australia led with 7 points, from NZ 5, England 4, Wales and France 2 each. One more game down under and then it was on to the Northern Hemisphere for the second round of matches.

September 1975: In Warrington, UK, England narrowly beat Wales 22-16 (just 5,000) and 18,000 came to the match in Auckland to see Australia win 24-8 over NZ.

October 1975: France hosted England and were overwhelmed 2-48 in Bordeaux (1,600!). They then had NZ visit them in Marseille (10,000) with a 12-12 result. Across the channel, Wales took on Australia in Swansea (11,000) but lost 6-18. England defeated NZ 27-12 in Bradford (5,500) and Australia were victors in Perpignan (10,500) over France 2-41.

November 1975: England prevailed over Australia 16-13 at Wigan (9,400) and Wales pipped NZ at Swansea (2,650) 25-24 and four days later accounted for France in Salford (2,250) 23-2.

Critical points were England losing to Wales in June. England didn't lose to Australia but ended up second. NZ losing its last game to Wales cost them third while the Welsh finishing on two wins moved from 5th to 3rd. France won its first game but fell away after that. In the end Australia took the crown - with no final held - by a single point. An unusual tournament indeed.